Re: [squid-users] Re: FreeBSD 6.x server with Squid/diskd

From: Santosh Rani <santoshballey@dont-contact.us>
Date: Mon, 11 Sep 2006 18:05:00 +0530

Sorry, my last message was inadvertently sent to the wrong messages thread.

Best Regards

On 11/09/06, Santosh Rani <santoshballey@gmail.com> wrote:
> Normally, Squid would start when Computer is switched ON. But today
> (11 Sep 2006) it refused to start. Squid is listed in services in "
> Control Panel > Computer Administration > Services " From where if I
> try to start it manually it gives error 1067. Reinstalling squid
> solves the problem. But if I copy the same previous 'cache'
> directory to the new installation folder of Squid , it again starts
> giving same problem. I have tried using the same configuration file
> that I used with my previous installation of Squid, it works with new
> installation.
> My cache size as specified in squid.conf is 500 MB. The cache size has
> grown to 4500 MB. Could the error be related to this cache size?
>
> Regards
>
> On 11/09/06, Henrik Nordstrom <henrik@henriknordstrom.net> wrote:
> > mån 2006-09-11 klockan 12:39 +0530 skrev Santosh Rani:
> > > Squid version : squid2.5 stable3
> > > Allocated cache_mem: 240 MB
> > > Cache size: 5000 MB
> > > HDD Type: SATA
> > > I am not able to start squid I am getting error 1067. What could be
> > > the proble. What is the meaning of this error?
> >
> > Good question. It's not a Squid error code as far as I know..
> >
> > Why is showing the error, where?
> >
> > Regards
> > Henrik
> >
> >
> >
>
>
> On 07/09/06, Henrik Nordstrom <henrik@henriknordstrom.net> wrote:
> > mån 2006-09-04 klockan 11:17 -0600 skrev Brett Glass:
> > > Henrik:
> > >
> > > In what version of Squid was this instability introduced? Does it
> > > only show up in certain versions of the operating system? We have
> > > caches running FreeBSD 4.9 and Squid 2.5.STABLE5 (see the output of
> > > "squid -v" below) which are absolutely rock solid under heavy
> > > loads; they work so well that we have not upgraded them.
> >
> > It's always been there actually, for as long as diskd has existed. But
> > it only occurs when diskd is being pushed to the limits, which
> > indirectly means the faster Squid is the likelier the problem is seen..
> >
> > Regards
> > Henrik
> >
> >
> >
>
Received on Mon Sep 11 2006 - 06:35:12 MDT

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